Chrysler Cites Progress in Year Out of Bankruptcy

By Tom Krisher | June 11, 2010 | 11:49 AM EDT

In this May 21, 2010 file photo, Chrylser CEO Sergio Marchionne addresses visitors to the Jefferson North Assembly Plant, in Detroit. Marchionne is telling employees Friday, June 11, 2010, that the company has made progress in the year since it left bankruptcy protection, but it still has a long way to go. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, file)

Detroit (AP) - One year after Chrysler Group LLC's government-funded exit from bankruptcy protection, CEO Sergio Marchionne is telling employees that the company has made progress but still has a long way to go.

In a Friday e-mail to employees obtained by The Associated Press, Marchionne touted Chrysler's progress in its first year as a new company but said it is far from full recovery.

"The one-year anniversary is a significant milestone," Marchionne wrote to the company's 49,000 workers. "There is still a very long road ahead in our drive to rebuild our business and to deliver on our promises to repay the American and Canadian taxpayers who gave us a second chance."

Marchionne, who also heads Italy's Fiat SpA, was given control of the automaker by the U.S. government when Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy on June 10, 2009. The company would have run out of cash and been sold off in pieces without roughly $15 billion in aid from the U.S. and Canadian governments.

He pointed to a $143 million first-quarter operating profit, two straight months of sales gains, cost savings from integration with Fiat, and plans for 16 new or updated vehicles by the end of this year.

"Crisis can bring out the best in a company and its people," Marchionne wrote.

Chrysler's sales growth in the U.S., its primary market, have lagged behind industry gains through the year. Through May, its sales were up 7.9 percent, far behind the industrywide gain of 17.2 percent, according to Autodata Corp. May sales rose 33 percent, but one-third of that was low-profit sales to fleet buyers such as rental car companies.

Chrysler also has struggled with quality problems, perennially getting low rankings from J.D. Power and Associates and Consumer Reports magazine.

Although Chrysler reported a first-quarter operating profit, it still posted a net loss of $197 million including interest and taxes.

The automaker plans to begin repaying the U.S., Canadian and Ontario governments starting next year.

One year after Chrysler Group LLC's government-funded exit from bankruptcy protection, CEO Sergio Marchionne is telling employees that the company has made progress but still has a long way to go.